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[An unusual cause of meningo-encephalitis: Japanese encephalitis].
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2005
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Formalin-inactivated VaccineDisease OutbreakTraveler DiarrheaHuman PathologyClinical EpidemiologyNeurologyEmerging Infectious DiseasePublic HealthNeuropathologyJapanese Encephalitis VirusNeuroimmunologyNeurovirologyEncephalitisClinical Infectious DiseaseJapanese EncephalitisEpidemiologyUnusual CauseNeuroinfectious DiseasesGlobal HealthPathogenesisInternational HealthClinical InfectionMedicine
Two women, 29 and 30 years of age, who had visited Indonesia and Thailand, respectively, during the summer, presented with diarrhoea, headache, fever and later neurological symptoms. The first patient had to be sedated because of restlessness and was admitted to the intensive-care unit for intravenous antimicrobial therapy; the second became comatose and received intravenous rehydration and antipyretics. No diagnosis was made during the acute phase ofthe illness, but later there was serological evidence of Japanese encephalitis. Both patients recovered, but memory and concentration difficulties persisted for a long time. Due to the increase in travelling, we see more and more cases of (rare) imported diseases. Japanese encephalitis is a viral infection that causes 50,000 cases each year in Asia with a mortality of 30%. The risk of transmission for tourists is very low. Most infections with Japanese encephalitis virus do not lead to symptomatic disease; only 0.1-5% of infections lead to clinical disease. The symptoms are initially non-specific, consisting of general discomfort and diarrhoea. After this, patients can develop headache, decreased consciousness and sometimes convulsions. Therapy consists of supportive care. For travellers at high risk of exposure, a formalin-inactivated vaccine is available. For the proper diagnosis of rare imported diseases, it is advisable to consult an infectious-disease specialist or microbiologist at an early stage when evaluating a patient who has recently returned from the tropics.